Login / Signup

Biomimetic cartilage-lubricating polymers regenerate cartilage in rats with early osteoarthritis.

Renjian XieHang YaoAngelina S MaoYe ZhuDawei QiYongguang JiaMeng GaoYunhua ChenLin WangDong-An WangKun WangSa LiuLi RenChuanbin Mao
Published in: Nature biomedical engineering (2021)
The early stages of progressive degeneration of cartilage in articular joints are a hallmark of osteoarthritis. Healthy cartilage is lubricated by brush-like cartilage-binding nanofibres with a hyaluronan backbone and two key side chains (lubricin and lipid). Here, we show that hyaluronan backbones grafted with lubricin-like sulfonate-rich polymers or with lipid-like phosphocholine-rich polymers together enhance cartilage regeneration in a rat model of early osteoarthritis. These biomimetic brush-like nanofibres show a high affinity for cartilage proteins, form a lubrication layer on the cartilage surface and efficiently lubricate damaged human cartilage, lowering its friction coefficient to the low levels typical of native cartilage. Intra-articular injection of the two types of nanofibre into rats with surgically induced osteoarthritic joints led to cartilage regeneration and to the abrogation of osteoarthritis within 8 weeks. Biocompatible injectable lubricants that facilitate cartilage regeneration may offer a translational strategy for the treatment of early osteoarthritis.
Keyphrases
  • extracellular matrix
  • rheumatoid arthritis
  • multiple sclerosis
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • oxidative stress
  • preterm birth
  • wound healing
  • dna binding
  • contrast enhanced